On June 1, 2017, shortly after President Donald Trump withdrew the US from the Paris Climate Agreement, the governors of New York, Washington, and California announced that they were forming the US Climate Alliance and committed to reducing their states’ greenhouse gas emissions by 26% to 28%. During Trump’s first term, the alliance made good on its promise to reduce state emissions, widened access to clean energy, and created clean energy jobs.
The group’s work didn’t stop while President Joe Biden was in office, but now that Trump has withdrawn the US from the Paris Climate Agreement again, the alliance is ready to leverage its collective power against climate rollbacks. Tech Brew talked with Casey Katims, USCA’s executive director, about Trump’s second term, climate-focused executive orders, and what’s next for the group.
What are the US Climate Alliance’s plans for the second Trump administration? How is this going to be different from his first term?
Governors understand that the climate crisis demands action, and that the crisis doesn’t pause just because there’s a change in federal administration. So, governors across the US Climate Alliance are committed to advancing climate solutions and continuing to press forward toward our climate goals and climate targets because it is a scientific imperative, regardless of what happens at the federal level.
Our coalition got its start seven and a half years ago when President Trump yanked the US out of the Paris agreement the last time. So we were quite literally built for this moment.
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